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币圈哈迪斯
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币圈哈迪斯

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I’ve seen this kind of market too many times. It drops for a while, then quickly rebounds back up—looks like it might reverse, but in most cases it’s the shorts washing the market. Why? Because a real bottom won’t so easily hand you a cheap bargain. Right now, the price is exactly sitting at a level that has repeatedly acted as resistance before. It’s like in a card game—your opponent has played the same card several times, and you know they still have more in hand. Based on my own experience, if this kind of rebound happens with shrinking volume or shows a divergence, that’s the best time to enter. I got burned before on a similar structure—chasing longs ended with me being buried. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson: it’s better to miss than to get it wrong. At this position, I believe it’s a high-probability spot to short. Near the lower lows, there are definitely many stop-loss orders waiting. The dealer won’t be done until they’ve hit them. So I’ll wait for the price to move close to the upper edge of the range, watch the order book for sell pressure, and if the sell orders are thick, I’ll try a small position first, then add later. Of course, if the price suddenly breaks upward with a large increase in volume, I won’t stubbornly hold on—I’ll cut my loss and exit. 🔴 Trade direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 0.559 – 0.577 🛑 Stop loss: 0.617 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.540 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.516 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.488 $RE Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve seen this kind of market too many times. It drops for a while, then quickly rebounds back up—looks like it might reverse, but in most cases it’s the shorts washing the market. Why? Because a real bottom won’t so easily hand you a cheap bargain. Right now, the price is exactly sitting at a level that has repeatedly acted as resistance before. It’s like in a card game—your opponent has played the same card several times, and you know they still have more in hand. Based on my own experience, if this kind of rebound happens with shrinking volume or shows a divergence, that’s the best time to enter.

I got burned before on a similar structure—chasing longs ended with me being buried. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson: it’s better to miss than to get it wrong.

At this position, I believe it’s a high-probability spot to short. Near the lower lows, there are definitely many stop-loss orders waiting. The dealer won’t be done until they’ve hit them. So I’ll wait for the price to move close to the upper edge of the range, watch the order book for sell pressure, and if the sell orders are thick, I’ll try a small position first, then add later. Of course, if the price suddenly breaks upward with a large increase in volume, I won’t stubbornly hold on—I’ll cut my loss and exit.

🔴 Trade direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 0.559 – 0.577
🛑 Stop loss: 0.617
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.540
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.516
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.488

$RE

Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve been trading this market for a long time, and I’ve seen too many cases of these “V-shaped rebounds” used to lure people into jumping on board. The price is pulled back to the supply zone—many people think it’s about to reverse, but it’s really just an opportunity to help trapped positions get out. I myself once chased long here, and ended up getting buried terribly. Later, I learned a lesson: true big moves often start by turning around from positions like this. Going short from this level isn’t about betting how far it can drop. Structurally, this is a zone where the bears have the advantage. Set your stop loss a bit wider—don’t be afraid of getting swept. If it truly breaks out, it means your judgment was wrong; accept the loss and leave. But once it falls back, there’s plenty of downside space. Take profit in batches—don’t get greedy. Secure the first target firmly, and then let the rest play out naturally. Remember: trading is a probability game. Don’t copy trades—learn to judge positions for yourself. 🔴 Trade direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 2.36 – 2.44 🛑 Stop loss: 2.80 🎯 Take profit 1: 2.0 🎯 Take profit 2: 1.85 🎯 Take profit 3: 1.62 $BEAT Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I’ve been trading this market for a long time, and I’ve seen too many cases of these “V-shaped rebounds” used to lure people into jumping on board. The price is pulled back to the supply zone—many people think it’s about to reverse, but it’s really just an opportunity to help trapped positions get out. I myself once chased long here, and ended up getting buried terribly.

Later, I learned a lesson: true big moves often start by turning around from positions like this.

Going short from this level isn’t about betting how far it can drop. Structurally, this is a zone where the bears have the advantage. Set your stop loss a bit wider—don’t be afraid of getting swept. If it truly breaks out, it means your judgment was wrong; accept the loss and leave. But once it falls back, there’s plenty of downside space. Take profit in batches—don’t get greedy. Secure the first target firmly, and then let the rest play out naturally. Remember: trading is a probability game. Don’t copy trades—learn to judge positions for yourself.

🔴 Trade direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 2.36 – 2.44
🛑 Stop loss: 2.80
🎯 Take profit 1: 2.0
🎯 Take profit 2: 1.85
🎯 Take profit 3: 1.62

$BEAT

Click below to trade 👇👇👇
Those who have been in the market for a few years should know this structure—I've seen it too many times. A lot of the time it’s not that the market didn’t have a chance; it’s that the entry timing was wrong. This time, the pattern I’m looking at is similar to the move I profited from earlier—it's the kind where after a period of bottom consolidation, it suddenly pulls back on reduced volume, and then a bullish candle rallies to confirm. When I first traded a structure like this, I wasn’t too confident. It ended up shooting up right away. Later, during my review, I realized the key was to wait for the second confirmation. Right now, the price is pulling back precisely to the top of the previous high-volume trading zone, while the moving averages are starting to stick together. All conditions point in the same direction—this market is going up. On risk, I have to add one more thing: the stop-loss can’t be too big, but it also can’t be too small. It depends on the structure. My stop-loss is set just below that key support. Even if it gets hit, it won’t hurt too much. The first target is the resistance level. If volume is still decent when it gets there, then I’ll keep holding. Don’t always try to catch the absolute bottom—waiting for one more confirmation is better than anything. 🟢 Trade direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 0.765 – 0.775 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.745 🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.790 $JTO Click below to trade 👇👇👇
Those who have been in the market for a few years should know this structure—I've seen it too many times. A lot of the time it’s not that the market didn’t have a chance; it’s that the entry timing was wrong. This time, the pattern I’m looking at is similar to the move I profited from earlier—it's the kind where after a period of bottom consolidation, it suddenly pulls back on reduced volume, and then a bullish candle rallies to confirm.

When I first traded a structure like this, I wasn’t too confident. It ended up shooting up right away. Later, during my review, I realized the key was to wait for the second confirmation. Right now, the price is pulling back precisely to the top of the previous high-volume trading zone, while the moving averages are starting to stick together. All conditions point in the same direction—this market is going up.

On risk, I have to add one more thing: the stop-loss can’t be too big, but it also can’t be too small. It depends on the structure. My stop-loss is set just below that key support. Even if it gets hit, it won’t hurt too much. The first target is the resistance level. If volume is still decent when it gets there, then I’ll keep holding. Don’t always try to catch the absolute bottom—waiting for one more confirmation is better than anything.

🟢 Trade direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 0.765 – 0.775
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.745
🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.790

$JTO

Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I've been trading this kind of structure for years. Every time I run into the situation where the support zone is tested repeatedly and the longs firmly hold on, there’s often an acceleration move shortly after. Earlier, when I traded $ETH, I also saw a similar pattern: the price churned along the support line for two days, then suddenly broke out with a surge in volume—straight up and it grabbed about twenty percentage points. This $ASTER setup is quite similar to that. The key is whether that bottom line can hold. From what I can see, it’s being defended very steadily. From my personal experience, at this kind of position don’t think about trying to catch the absolute lowest point. It’s safer to wait until the pullback stabilizes before entering. Look at how many times the price dips lower and then gets pulled back—this shows that buy orders below are quite thick. Also, the stop-loss is set just below the structure. If it breaks, you exit—losses stay controllable. But once it breaks above the previous high, the upside opens up. I personally will take a portion at the first target, and the rest will depend on the volume. If it breaks out with strong volume, I’ll hold for the move ahead. One more thing: don’t go all-in before the breakout. First, build a starter position. If the price pulls back to the support and confirms, then add more. That way, even if it’s a fake breakout and it retraces, you still have room to manage. Using this approach, the win rate can improve significantly. 🟢 Trade Direction: Long 📍 Entry Range: 0.5300 – 0.5400 🛑 Stop Loss: 0.5100 🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.5650 🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.5750 🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.5850 $MAGMA Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I've been trading this kind of structure for years. Every time I run into the situation where the support zone is tested repeatedly and the longs firmly hold on, there’s often an acceleration move shortly after. Earlier, when I traded
$ETH , I also saw a similar pattern: the price churned along the support line for two days, then suddenly broke out with a surge in volume—straight up and it grabbed about twenty percentage points. This
$ASTER setup is quite similar to that. The key is whether that bottom line can hold. From what I can see, it’s being defended very steadily.

From my personal experience, at this kind of position don’t think about trying to catch the absolute lowest point. It’s safer to wait until the pullback stabilizes before entering. Look at how many times the price dips lower and then gets pulled back—this shows that buy orders below are quite thick. Also, the stop-loss is set just below the structure. If it breaks, you exit—losses stay controllable. But once it breaks above the previous high, the upside opens up. I personally will take a portion at the first target, and the rest will depend on the volume. If it breaks out with strong volume, I’ll hold for the move ahead.

One more thing: don’t go all-in before the breakout. First, build a starter position. If the price pulls back to the support and confirms, then add more. That way, even if it’s a fake breakout and it retraces, you still have room to manage. Using this approach, the win rate can improve significantly.

🟢 Trade Direction: Long
📍 Entry Range: 0.5300 – 0.5400
🛑 Stop Loss: 0.5100
🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.5650
🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.5750
🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.5850

$MAGMA

Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I’ve been burned before. I tried to bottom-fish at the position $EPIC , but I got trapped for a week before I finally broke even. After that, I reminded myself: when the price rebounds back toward an earlier resistance zone but the volume can’t keep up, the move is often a trap. Now I’m seeing the same pattern again—when the price touches 0.419–0.421, it suddenly weakens, and the major moving averages are still pressing downward. Based on my experience, these kinds of “false breakouts” usually come with a quick spike to lure people in, followed by an instant drop back. So I’m not in a hurry. I’ll wait for it to test this range again. If it can’t break through, or if after the move it quickly forms a long upper wick, that will be the signal. Put the stop-loss slightly above 0.429 to allow some tolerance, but the risk/reward ratio is very favorable. Also pay attention: if it breaks down immediately, don’t chase. Wait for the rebound after the first sharp sell-off, or wait until a consolidation pattern forms on the smaller time frame. The key is to lock in the risk; the rest is up to the trend. If this trade works, the downside potential really is tempting. 🔴 Trading direction: Short 📍 Entry zone: 0.41933 – 0.42117 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.42906 🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.41364 🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.40924 🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40263 $EPIC Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve been burned before. I tried to bottom-fish at the position $EPIC , but I got trapped for a week before I finally broke even. After that, I reminded myself: when the price rebounds back toward an earlier resistance zone but the volume can’t keep up, the move is often a trap. Now I’m seeing the same pattern again—when the price touches 0.419–0.421, it suddenly weakens, and the major moving averages are still pressing downward.

Based on my experience, these kinds of “false breakouts” usually come with a quick spike to lure people in, followed by an instant drop back. So I’m not in a hurry. I’ll wait for it to test this range again. If it can’t break through, or if after the move it quickly forms a long upper wick, that will be the signal. Put the stop-loss slightly above 0.429 to allow some tolerance, but the risk/reward ratio is very favorable.

Also pay attention: if it breaks down immediately, don’t chase. Wait for the rebound after the first sharp sell-off, or wait until a consolidation pattern forms on the smaller time frame. The key is to lock in the risk; the rest is up to the trend. If this trade works, the downside potential really is tempting.

🔴 Trading direction: Short
📍 Entry zone: 0.41933 – 0.42117
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.42906
🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.41364
🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.40924
🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40263

$EPIC

Click below to trade👇👇👇
Let me tell you this: I’ve been watching the bottom structure of $G since last year, and this breakout has actually been brewing for a long time. The platform before it had accumulated several months of turnover; now, the pullback can’t break—meaning the main funds haven’t left and are just waiting for the right moment. I’ve made many similar trades. The one that stands out most is: after a breakout, there was a retest. I hesitated and didn’t get on, and then it surged and jumped nearly double in one move. After that, I understood—when a stock retraces to a key level and the logic is still intact, you should act decisively. Now the only thing to watch for is not to get scared by short-term fluctuations. Set your stop-loss; the rest is up to the market. Don’t take on too heavy a position—keep some room. If a black swan happens, you’ll be able to hold through it. Also, in this kind of market, the biggest taboo is frequent stop-outs. Once you’re in, as long as the level hasn’t broken, don’t keep scaring yourself. I usually set a trailing stop. When the first target is hit, I move the stop-loss up to the entry price. After that, it’s all profit running. Remember: trading isn’t gambling—it’s waiting. 🟢 Trade Direction: Go Long 📍 Entry Range: 0.00424 – 0.00431 🛑 Stop Loss: 0.00393 🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00460 🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00490 🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00518 Click below to trade 👇👇👇
Let me tell you this: I’ve been watching the bottom structure of $G since last year, and this breakout has actually been brewing for a long time. The platform before it had accumulated several months of turnover; now, the pullback can’t break—meaning the main funds haven’t left and are just waiting for the right moment. I’ve made many similar trades. The one that stands out most is: after a breakout, there was a retest. I hesitated and didn’t get on, and then it surged and jumped nearly double in one move. After that, I understood—when a stock retraces to a key level and the logic is still intact, you should act decisively.

Now the only thing to watch for is not to get scared by short-term fluctuations. Set your stop-loss; the rest is up to the market. Don’t take on too heavy a position—keep some room. If a black swan happens, you’ll be able to hold through it. Also, in this kind of market, the biggest taboo is frequent stop-outs. Once you’re in, as long as the level hasn’t broken, don’t keep scaring yourself. I usually set a trailing stop. When the first target is hit, I move the stop-loss up to the entry price. After that, it’s all profit running.

Remember: trading isn’t gambling—it’s waiting.

🟢 Trade Direction: Go Long
📍 Entry Range: 0.00424 – 0.00431
🛑 Stop Loss: 0.00393
🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00460
🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00490
🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00518

Click below to trade 👇👇👇
Remember last year $SAND did something similar in the same kind of position. Back then, a lot of people panicked and cut their losses. Then—right after they were done selling—the price surged hard. This kind of pullback-and-test move is something old hands understand: the main forces use fear to shake out the uncommitted, then move in lightly and pull the order book higher. The key is volume. This time, after the drop, there’s clearly been an increase in volume, which suggests that money is quietly accumulating. Personally, in this kind of spot, I usually start by entering with a small position to probe. Then I add after it forms a bullish engulfing candle or a bottoming doji. My stop-loss goes just slightly below the support. If it breaks, then the thesis is wrong—but the risk/reward is still reasonable. As for targets, don’t get too greedy. First look at the initial resistance level; once it reaches there, then decide whether to move the stop-loss or reduce the position. When trading, don’t always try to eat a whole fat target in one bite. Steady execution is what keeps you alive. 🟢 Trade direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 0.04666 – 0.04699 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.04483 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.04854 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.05088 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.05393 $SAND Click below to trade👇👇👇
Remember last year
$SAND did something similar in the same kind of position. Back then, a lot of people panicked and cut their losses. Then—right after they were done selling—the price surged hard. This kind of pullback-and-test move is something old hands understand: the main forces use fear to shake out the uncommitted, then move in lightly and pull the order book higher. The key is volume. This time, after the drop, there’s clearly been an increase in volume, which suggests that money is quietly accumulating.

Personally, in this kind of spot, I usually start by entering with a small position to probe. Then I add after it forms a bullish engulfing candle or a bottoming doji. My stop-loss goes just slightly below the support. If it breaks, then the thesis is wrong—but the risk/reward is still reasonable. As for targets, don’t get too greedy. First look at the initial resistance level; once it reaches there, then decide whether to move the stop-loss or reduce the position. When trading, don’t always try to eat a whole fat target in one bite. Steady execution is what keeps you alive.

🟢 Trade direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 0.04666 – 0.04699
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.04483
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.04854
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.05088
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.05393

$SAND

Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve encountered this kind of price action several times before: the price dips into a key zone, everyone calls for a breakdown, but it stubbornly holds, then suddenly makes a sharp rally and shakes people out. This time $SOL I can see it in the order book: the buy orders below are solid, and that 15-minute strong bullish candle on high volume genuinely absorbed the sell pressure. It feels very similar to the bearish trap pattern from before. The RSI hasn’t reached extreme levels, which suggests the momentum hasn’t fully been released yet. My usual thinking is: the 4-hour structure is still intact. Although the daily chart is somewhat bearish, it has already fallen for a while. Going long here means you either make a quick profit or get stopped out with a small loss—so the risk-reward ratio is reasonable. I’ve been burned before too: I used to wait for everything to be perfectly timed, then ended up missing the trade. So now I focus more on the location than on an exact entry price. Place the stop-loss below the prior low—if it breaks, I accept it and don’t hold on. Reduce positions in three take-profit targets in sequence: when the first target is hit, lock in part of the profit, then let the rest run. Trading is all about playing the probabilities, and I think this setup is worth trying. 🟢 Trade direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 69.72795 – 69.98216 🛑 Stop loss: 68.63486 🎯 Take profit 1: 70.77020 🎯 Take profit 2: 71.38030 🎯 Take profit 3: 72.29545 $SOL Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve encountered this kind of price action several times before: the price dips into a key zone, everyone calls for a breakdown, but it stubbornly holds, then suddenly makes a sharp rally and shakes people out. This time
$SOL I can see it in the order book: the buy orders below are solid, and that 15-minute strong bullish candle on high volume genuinely absorbed the sell pressure. It feels very similar to the bearish trap pattern from before. The RSI hasn’t reached extreme levels, which suggests the momentum hasn’t fully been released yet.

My usual thinking is: the 4-hour structure is still intact. Although the daily chart is somewhat bearish, it has already fallen for a while. Going long here means you either make a quick profit or get stopped out with a small loss—so the risk-reward ratio is reasonable. I’ve been burned before too: I used to wait for everything to be perfectly timed, then ended up missing the trade. So now I focus more on the location than on an exact entry price. Place the stop-loss below the prior low—if it breaks, I accept it and don’t hold on. Reduce positions in three take-profit targets in sequence: when the first target is hit, lock in part of the profit, then let the rest run. Trading is all about playing the probabilities, and I think this setup is worth trying.

🟢 Trade direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 69.72795 – 69.98216
🛑 Stop loss: 68.63486
🎯 Take profit 1: 70.77020
🎯 Take profit 2: 71.38030
🎯 Take profit 3: 72.29545

$SOL

Click below to trade👇👇👇
【Conservative caution version】 EPIC is currently at a critical technical standoff. The daily bearish trend is clear, but after the short-term bounce to the resistance level, we still need to observe how price reacts. In terms of strategy, choosing to go short is based on the bearish structure on the 4-hour chart, along with the alignment of the 15-minute volume and relative strength indicators—this is indeed a signal worth paying attention to. However, it’s important to note: any test of a resistance level may result in a false breakout or a quick shakeout, especially if you use higher leverage. Even small price fluctuations can lead to unexpected losses. The stop-loss setting for this strategy seems reasonable, but market sentiment is unpredictable. If a sudden positive news item appears or large buy orders flood in, the short positions could face a significant pullback. It’s recommended that before entering, you first assess your own risk tolerance, use a small position to test the move, or wait until price clearly breaks below short-term support before adding exposure. Taking profit in batches is a smart approach—it locks in part of the gains while keeping positions aligned with the continuation of the trend. 🔴 Trading direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 0.41933 – 0.42117 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.42906 🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.41364 🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.40924 🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40263 $EPIC Click below to trade👇👇👇
【Conservative caution version】 EPIC is currently at a critical technical standoff. The daily bearish trend is clear, but after the short-term bounce to the resistance level, we still need to observe how price reacts. In terms of strategy, choosing to go short is based on the bearish structure on the 4-hour chart, along with the alignment of the 15-minute volume and relative strength indicators—this is indeed a signal worth paying attention to. However, it’s important to note: any test of a resistance level may result in a false breakout or a quick shakeout, especially if you use higher leverage. Even small price fluctuations can lead to unexpected losses.

The stop-loss setting for this strategy seems reasonable, but market sentiment is unpredictable. If a sudden positive news item appears or large buy orders flood in, the short positions could face a significant pullback. It’s recommended that before entering, you first assess your own risk tolerance, use a small position to test the move, or wait until price clearly breaks below short-term support before adding exposure. Taking profit in batches is a smart approach—it locks in part of the gains while keeping positions aligned with the continuation of the trend.

🔴 Trading direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 0.41933 – 0.42117
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.42906
🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.41364
🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.40924
🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40263

$EPIC

Click below to trade👇👇👇
After trading for a long time, you’ll understand this: when the market drops so hard that everyone is panicking, that’s often the opportunity. I suffered a lot early on—chasing rallies and selling in panic. Later, I learned to read structure. For example, this pullback of $BTC is actually similar to a few big retests last year: it hits the upper edge of the prior consolidation range, then stabilizes on shrinking volume. Market sentiment has gone from FOMO to doubt, and now people are starting to say it will drop back to 40,000. In situations like this, the bottom is often not far off. I entered in batches, because it’s impossible to buy at the absolute low. First, I place some orders in the 50k range. If it continues to probe lower and reaches a deeper support, I add a bit more, but I keep total position sizing under control. I set the stop-loss at the point where the structure breaks—so even if I’m wrong, it won’t seriously damage me. The reason I’m bullish isn’t blind faith; it’s the confluence of technicals and fundamentals. The halving cycle hasn’t truly kicked off yet—this kind of pullback is the final chance for people who haven’t gotten in. Remember: if it rises a lot, don’t chase; if it falls a lot, you can dare to buy—provided the logic hasn’t changed. 🟢 Trading direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 58000 – 60000 🛑 Stop-loss: 54500 🎯 Take-profit 1: 68000 🎯 Take-profit 2: 76000 🎯 Take-profit 3: 80000 🎯 Take-profit 4: 94000 $BTC Click below to trade👇👇👇
After trading for a long time, you’ll understand this: when the market drops so hard that everyone is panicking, that’s often the opportunity. I suffered a lot early on—chasing rallies and selling in panic. Later, I learned to read structure. For example, this pullback of $BTC is actually similar to a few big retests last year: it hits the upper edge of the prior consolidation range, then stabilizes on shrinking volume. Market sentiment has gone from FOMO to doubt, and now people are starting to say it will drop back to 40,000. In situations like this, the bottom is often not far off.

I entered in batches, because it’s impossible to buy at the absolute low. First, I place some orders in the 50k range. If it continues to probe lower and reaches a deeper support, I add a bit more, but I keep total position sizing under control. I set the stop-loss at the point where the structure breaks—so even if I’m wrong, it won’t seriously damage me. The reason I’m bullish isn’t blind faith; it’s the confluence of technicals and fundamentals. The halving cycle hasn’t truly kicked off yet—this kind of pullback is the final chance for people who haven’t gotten in. Remember: if it rises a lot, don’t chase; if it falls a lot, you can dare to buy—provided the logic hasn’t changed.

🟢 Trading direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 58000 – 60000
🛑 Stop-loss: 54500
🎯 Take-profit 1: 68000
🎯 Take-profit 2: 76000
🎯 Take-profit 3: 80000
🎯 Take-profit 4: 94000

$BTC

Click below to trade👇👇👇
Let me share my own experience. When I encounter a pattern like $KAITO , I usually take a second look. Last year, I did a ticket with a similar structure. Back then, it also spent a long time consolidating before suddenly rallying. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and it ended up flying straight up. So this time, when I saw it break through that level, I didn’t plan to let it go. After the breakout, the pullback-and-confirmation move is actually the safest entry point—because the stop-loss placement is very clear. As long as it breaks below the bottom of the breakout range, you admit defeat; you won’t lose many points. Now the price is holding steady. Bullish momentum is still there, and there are no signs of volume drying up while price stalls. The RSI is roughly slightly above the middle—it's not overheated yet. In this phase, the biggest fear is not being able to hold the position, or seeing a bit of floating profit and rushing to get out. After years of trading, this is what I’ve concluded: when a trend has just formed, don’t always think about taking profit too early. Let the profit run; let it weaken on its own before exiting. Of course, you must set your protective level. If the floating profit is enough, move the stop-loss to the break-even line. After that, it’s basically a pure profit game. 🟢 Trade direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 0.5010 – 0.5045 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.4850 🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.5200 🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.5300 🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.5400 $KAITO Click below to trade👇👇👇
Let me share my own experience. When I encounter a pattern like $KAITO , I usually take a second look. Last year, I did a ticket with a similar structure. Back then, it also spent a long time consolidating before suddenly rallying. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and it ended up flying straight up. So this time, when I saw it break through that level, I didn’t plan to let it go. After the breakout, the pullback-and-confirmation move is actually the safest entry point—because the stop-loss placement is very clear. As long as it breaks below the bottom of the breakout range, you admit defeat; you won’t lose many points.

Now the price is holding steady. Bullish momentum is still there, and there are no signs of volume drying up while price stalls. The RSI is roughly slightly above the middle—it's not overheated yet. In this phase, the biggest fear is not being able to hold the position, or seeing a bit of floating profit and rushing to get out. After years of trading, this is what I’ve concluded: when a trend has just formed, don’t always think about taking profit too early. Let the profit run; let it weaken on its own before exiting. Of course, you must set your protective level. If the floating profit is enough, move the stop-loss to the break-even line. After that, it’s basically a pure profit game.

🟢 Trade direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 0.5010 – 0.5045
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.4850
🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.5200
🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.5300
🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.5400

$KAITO

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Won $ESP has happened many times already. The characteristic of this coin is that it spikes up and then falls back very quickly. This time is the same script again: it gets pulled up to the key resistance level, then starts ranging sideways, with volume decreasing day by day. Last year I encountered a similar situation. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and then it dropped straight down by more than a dozen points. So this time I’m watching it closely. From the order book, the sell orders stacked up are quite thick, while the buy orders are scattered and sparse. That suggests large funds are pressing the price to distribute. The RSI has also turned downward, and divergence signals are obvious. In this kind of situation, don’t try to guess whether it can keep running higher—wait until it rebounds to that resistance level, then when it prints another upper wick, it basically confirms the setup. I plan to enter in batches. The first target is the small support ahead; once it reaches there, I’ll reduce by half, and then decide what to do with the rest based on how it behaves. Stop loss must be set. If a sudden positive news event triggers a爆pump, the loss could be big. But overall, at this level, the risk-reward for going short is pretty favorable. Remember: don’t go against the trend. Resistance is right above; keep hitting it there. 🔴 Trading direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 0.0664 – 0.0668 🛑 Stop loss: 0.0678 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.0659 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.0643 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.0638 $ESP Click below to trade 👇👇👇
Won
$ESP has happened many times already. The characteristic of this coin is that it spikes up and then falls back very quickly. This time is the same script again: it gets pulled up to the key resistance level, then starts ranging sideways, with volume decreasing day by day. Last year I encountered a similar situation. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and then it dropped straight down by more than a dozen points. So this time I’m watching it closely.

From the order book, the sell orders stacked up are quite thick, while the buy orders are scattered and sparse. That suggests large funds are pressing the price to distribute. The RSI has also turned downward, and divergence signals are obvious. In this kind of situation, don’t try to guess whether it can keep running higher—wait until it rebounds to that resistance level, then when it prints another upper wick, it basically confirms the setup. I plan to enter in batches. The first target is the small support ahead; once it reaches there, I’ll reduce by half, and then decide what to do with the rest based on how it behaves.

Stop loss must be set. If a sudden positive news event triggers a爆pump, the loss could be big. But overall, at this level, the risk-reward for going short is pretty favorable. Remember: don’t go against the trend. Resistance is right above; keep hitting it there.

🔴 Trading direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 0.0664 – 0.0668
🛑 Stop loss: 0.0678
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.0659
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.0643
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.0638

$ESP

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I’ve eaten a few of these kinds of forced, hard-pull market moves before, and the impression was especially deep. That time was also the kind of setup like $TNSR —suddenly there was a surge in volume pulling up aggressively. It looked very strong, but the tail end of the candlestick was unusually long, which suggests someone was distributing at the high. Later I learned to be smarter: when I run into this kind of impulsive rally that immediately pulls back, I won’t rush in. I wait for a second confirmation. What’s happening now is a classic failed second confirmation—the price is rejected and stays outside the resistance zone. I’ve personally done stats on the shorting win rate from this area, and it’s much more stable than chasing a breakout. From my own experience, the biggest thing to fear with this setup is a false breakout. But as long as it doesn’t use volume to break and hold above that rejection zone, there’s nothing to be afraid of. I usually set a tight stop-loss first, placing it slightly above the resistance zone. That way, even if I get swept, the loss stays limited. But once the direction is right, the reward-to-risk ratio is very favorable. Also, don’t expect it to drop to the bottom in one go—markets often take “three steps back and a glance,” so taking profit in stages helps keep your mindset steadier. 🔴 Trading direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 0.0414 – 0.0418 🛑 Stop loss: 0.0428 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.0405 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.0396 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.0388 $TNSR Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I’ve eaten a few of these kinds of forced, hard-pull market moves before, and the impression was especially deep. That time was also the kind of setup like $TNSR —suddenly there was a surge in volume pulling up aggressively. It looked very strong, but the tail end of the candlestick was unusually long, which suggests someone was distributing at the high. Later I learned to be smarter: when I run into this kind of impulsive rally that immediately pulls back, I won’t rush in. I wait for a second confirmation. What’s happening now is a classic failed second confirmation—the price is rejected and stays outside the resistance zone. I’ve personally done stats on the shorting win rate from this area, and it’s much more stable than chasing a breakout.

From my own experience, the biggest thing to fear with this setup is a false breakout. But as long as it doesn’t use volume to break and hold above that rejection zone, there’s nothing to be afraid of. I usually set a tight stop-loss first, placing it slightly above the resistance zone. That way, even if I get swept, the loss stays limited. But once the direction is right, the reward-to-risk ratio is very favorable. Also, don’t expect it to drop to the bottom in one go—markets often take “three steps back and a glance,” so taking profit in stages helps keep your mindset steadier.

🔴 Trading direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 0.0414 – 0.0418
🛑 Stop loss: 0.0428
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.0405
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.0396
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.0388

$TNSR

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I’ve been trading for eight years, and I’ve seen this kind of structure too many times. After each big bullish candle that sends price up, the market always disagrees—some think it should pull back, while others think it should keep going. But what truly determines the direction is whether support can hold during the pullback. This price action is very typical—after pushing to a high, it doesn’t immediately V-reverse and drop; instead, it repeatedly consolidates and chops around within a very narrow range, which indicates that selling pressure isn’t strong. Remember, back in the year before last, when I was trading a certain altcoin, it had exactly the same chart pattern. At the time, I hesitated and didn’t get in, and then after it went sideways for about a week, it suddenly exploded upward and doubled. Since then, I’ve kept this in mind: this kind of slow-bull style consolidation is often the main players accumulating, waiting for retail to hand over their coins. This current setup—RSI falling back into the neutral zone and volume drying up—is precisely the point where bulls and bears are balanced. Once that balance is broken, the move will be very efficient. Experience tells me not to guess the top at this position. A lot of people like to wait until it rises and then chase, but the real profit belongs to those who are willing to set up during the consolidation period. Set your stop-loss—at most you lose a little in trading fees. But once the direction is right, it can be a big win. 🟢 Trade Direction: Long 📍 Entry Range: 0.00430 – 0.00435 🛑 Stop-Loss: 0.00408 🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00455 🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00470 🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00488 Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve been trading for eight years, and I’ve seen this kind of structure too many times. After each big bullish candle that sends price up, the market always disagrees—some think it should pull back, while others think it should keep going. But what truly determines the direction is whether support can hold during the pullback. This price action is very typical—after pushing to a high, it doesn’t immediately V-reverse and drop; instead, it repeatedly consolidates and chops around within a very narrow range, which indicates that selling pressure isn’t strong.

Remember, back in the year before last, when I was trading a certain altcoin, it had exactly the same chart pattern. At the time, I hesitated and didn’t get in, and then after it went sideways for about a week, it suddenly exploded upward and doubled. Since then, I’ve kept this in mind: this kind of slow-bull style consolidation is often the main players accumulating, waiting for retail to hand over their coins. This current setup—RSI falling back into the neutral zone and volume drying up—is precisely the point where bulls and bears are balanced. Once that balance is broken, the move will be very efficient.

Experience tells me not to guess the top at this position. A lot of people like to wait until it rises and then chase, but the real profit belongs to those who are willing to set up during the consolidation period. Set your stop-loss—at most you lose a little in trading fees. But once the direction is right, it can be a big win.

🟢 Trade Direction: Long
📍 Entry Range: 0.00430 – 0.00435
🛑 Stop-Loss: 0.00408
🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00455
🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00470
🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00488

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I’ve done setups like this a few times before, and the one I remember most was last year: $PEPE surged to a resistance level, then shrank in size and pulled back. I didn’t dare to short it then, and as a result it later crashed another 30 points. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson. For this kind of pattern—“resistance level being tested + volume suddenly expanding”—in ten times, seven or eight times it really does signal a reversal. $WLD is giving off exactly that vibe right now. Look at it: it was pushed back from that area around 0.47. The trading volume is even larger than it was during the earlier upswing. What does that mean? It means many people chose to take profit at that level, and some even actively initiated short positions. And this 0.515 resistance has been tested repeatedly for weeks—it still hasn’t been broken. This rebound is just another confirmation that the pressure is still valid. Based on my experience, if it can’t break through on the third test, then it’s time to exit and switch to the opposite direction. In execution, I’ll do it in two steps: first, watch the area near the prior low. If price hits it quickly, I’ll reduce the position; the remaining position I’ll keep farther out. 🔴 Trade direction: Short 📍 Entry range: 0.47475 – 0.47144 🛑 Stop loss: 0.49317 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.45585 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.43223 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.40153 $WLD Click below to trade👇👇👇
I’ve done setups like this a few times before, and the one I remember most was last year: $PEPE surged to a resistance level, then shrank in size and pulled back. I didn’t dare to short it then, and as a result it later crashed another 30 points. Since then, I’ve learned my lesson. For this kind of pattern—“resistance level being tested + volume suddenly expanding”—in ten times, seven or eight times it really does signal a reversal.

$WLD is giving off exactly that vibe right now.

Look at it: it was pushed back from that area around 0.47. The trading volume is even larger than it was during the earlier upswing. What does that mean? It means many people chose to take profit at that level, and some even actively initiated short positions. And this 0.515 resistance has been tested repeatedly for weeks—it still hasn’t been broken. This rebound is just another confirmation that the pressure is still valid. Based on my experience, if it can’t break through on the third test, then it’s time to exit and switch to the opposite direction.

In execution, I’ll do it in two steps: first, watch the area near the prior low. If price hits it quickly, I’ll reduce the position; the remaining position I’ll keep farther out.

🔴 Trade direction: Short
📍 Entry range: 0.47475 – 0.47144
🛑 Stop loss: 0.49317
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.45585
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.43223
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.40153

$WLD

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I’ve been watching ALLO for a while. In the previous rebounds, I didn’t make a move because it always felt like something was off. This time is different: after the price pulled back into the range around 0.38, the buyer volume on the 15-minute chart clearly stepped in, and the RSI is also just sitting at a neutral level—unlike before, when it would quickly run into overbought. I’ve been burned and also profited from similar setups. The deepest lesson I’ve learned is: don’t chase at emotional highs, and don’t cut out of panic. Enter from this level because the 4-hour and daily trends haven’t broken, and the stop-loss can be placed reasonably. Even if you get stopped out, it won’t hurt you much. Experienced traders all know this: trading isn’t about prediction—it’s about response. The signals are leaning bullish, so I’ll go long according to the plan. When it reaches the targets, I’ll reduce positions, and let the remaining portion ride for profit. Remember: discipline matters more than direction. 🟢 Trading bias: Long 📍 Entry range: 0.38565 – 0.38767 🛑 Stop-loss: 0.37692 🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.39396 🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.39883 🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40614 $ALLO Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I’ve been watching ALLO for a while. In the previous rebounds, I didn’t make a move because it always felt like something was off. This time is different: after the price pulled back into the range around 0.38, the buyer volume on the 15-minute chart clearly stepped in, and the RSI is also just sitting at a neutral level—unlike before, when it would quickly run into overbought.

I’ve been burned and also profited from similar setups. The deepest lesson I’ve learned is: don’t chase at emotional highs, and don’t cut out of panic. Enter from this level because the 4-hour and daily trends haven’t broken, and the stop-loss can be placed reasonably. Even if you get stopped out, it won’t hurt you much.

Experienced traders all know this: trading isn’t about prediction—it’s about response. The signals are leaning bullish, so I’ll go long according to the plan. When it reaches the targets, I’ll reduce positions, and let the remaining portion ride for profit. Remember: discipline matters more than direction.

🟢 Trading bias: Long
📍 Entry range: 0.38565 – 0.38767
🛑 Stop-loss: 0.37692
🎯 Take-profit 1: 0.39396
🎯 Take-profit 2: 0.39883
🎯 Take-profit 3: 0.40614

$ALLO

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I suffered losses on a similar structure early on. Back then, when I saw the RSI go above 30, I thought it was going to bounce—so I chased a long position and ended up trapped above the resistance zone. Later I learned better—during a ranging market, a decrease in volume on the pullback from key resistance levels is actually more trustworthy than a move with rising volume. This time, $ASTER’s daily chart has been stuck along the upper edge of the range. The few 4-hour candles with long upper wicks make me think of $BTC’s similar behavior at a key level not long ago: it was also a low-volume top, and then it ended with a big sell-off. So when I saw this setup, I didn’t rush to open a trade. Instead, I waited for price to test the resistance zone again and confirm it. 🔴 Trade Direction: Short 📍 Entry Range: 0.01186 – 0.01207 🛑 Stop Loss: 0.01347 🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.01083 🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.01007 🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00894 $FOGO Click below to trade 👇👇👇
I suffered losses on a similar structure early on. Back then, when I saw the RSI go above 30, I thought it was going to bounce—so I chased a long position and ended up trapped above the resistance zone. Later I learned better—during a ranging market, a decrease in volume on the pullback from key resistance levels is actually more trustworthy than a move with rising volume.

This time, $ASTER ’s daily chart has been stuck along the upper edge of the range. The few 4-hour candles with long upper wicks make me think of $BTC ’s similar behavior at a key level not long ago: it was also a low-volume top, and then it ended with a big sell-off.

So when I saw this setup, I didn’t rush to open a trade. Instead, I waited for price to test the resistance zone again and confirm it.

🔴 Trade Direction: Short
📍 Entry Range: 0.01186 – 0.01207
🛑 Stop Loss: 0.01347
🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.01083
🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.01007
🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00894

$FOGO

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Let me tell you a real experience. I used to get burned by this kind of structure: whenever I saw a breakout, I’d get impatient and chase it. In the end, I got swept out by a fake breakout. Later, I slowly learned to wait for the pullback and then confirm. This time, the way $G moves is actually quite standard—first it runs up with strong volume past a key zone, then it pulls back on reduced volume. The price then just stalls right at the upper edge of the previous support band, without going out of control. This kind of pullback that doesn’t break the support is a relatively safer left-side entry point in the crypto market. From my own observation, this type of pattern usually appears after the bottom of a higher time frame has been formed. For example, with $BTC’s previous rebounds—there have also been similar scripts: first it quickly moves away from the cost zone, then it uses time to create space so that the less坚定 ones get shaken out and off the train. At $G’s current position, from a wave perspective, it might be the end of the first corrective leg of the main impulsive run. But don’t expect an instant straight shot—those resistance levels above are backed by real trapped-position supply. They need volume to back it up before they can be chewed through. Set the stop loss a bit farther, but not too far, to avoid getting wicked out. I usually reference a point slightly below the most recent low to ensure the structure isn’t broken. 🟢 Trade direction: Long 📍 Entry range: 0.00430 – 0.00437 🛑 Stop loss: 0.00405 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.00460 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.00482 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.00502 $BTC Click below to trade👇👇👇
Let me tell you a real experience. I used to get burned by this kind of structure: whenever I saw a breakout, I’d get impatient and chase it. In the end, I got swept out by a fake breakout. Later, I slowly learned to wait for the pullback and then confirm. This time, the way $G moves is actually quite standard—first it runs up with strong volume past a key zone, then it pulls back on reduced volume. The price then just stalls right at the upper edge of the previous support band, without going out of control. This kind of pullback that doesn’t break the support is a relatively safer left-side entry point in the crypto market.

From my own observation, this type of pattern usually appears after the bottom of a higher time frame has been formed. For example, with $BTC ’s previous rebounds—there have also been similar scripts: first it quickly moves away from the cost zone, then it uses time to create space so that the less坚定 ones get shaken out and off the train. At $G ’s current position, from a wave perspective, it might be the end of the first corrective leg of the main impulsive run. But don’t expect an instant straight shot—those resistance levels above are backed by real trapped-position supply. They need volume to back it up before they can be chewed through.

Set the stop loss a bit farther, but not too far, to avoid getting wicked out. I usually reference a point slightly below the most recent low to ensure the structure isn’t broken.

🟢 Trade direction: Long
📍 Entry range: 0.00430 – 0.00437
🛑 Stop loss: 0.00405
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.00460
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.00482
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.00502

$BTC

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I got burned on $G once before, and it was also this kind of breakout structure. Back then I was too impatient—I chased it when it spiked higher, and ended up trapped at the top. Later I learned my lesson: after the breakout, wait for the pullback, confirm support, and then enter. That way the win rate is noticeably higher. This time, the volume on $G is even prettier than last time, and the depth of the pullback is very shallow, which suggests the sellers simply don’t have the strength to smash it down. This kind of market feel is something you train. The longer you watch, the more you can tell which breakouts are fake and which indicate that the trend is truly strengthening. My current habit is: once I enter, I set the stop loss right away. When the first target is reached, I take some profit first, move the stop loss to the entry price, and then the rest is 🟢 Trade Direction: Long 📍 Entry Range: 0.00430 – 0.00437 🛑 Stop Loss: 0.00405 🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00460 🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00482 🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00502 Click below to trade👇👇👇
I got burned on $G once before, and it was also this kind of breakout structure. Back then I was too impatient—I chased it when it spiked higher, and ended up trapped at the top. Later I learned my lesson: after the breakout, wait for the pullback, confirm support, and then enter. That way the win rate is noticeably higher.

This time, the volume on $G is even prettier than last time, and the depth of the pullback is very shallow, which suggests the sellers simply don’t have the strength to smash it down.

This kind of market feel is something you train. The longer you watch, the more you can tell which breakouts are fake and which indicate that the trend is truly strengthening. My current habit is: once I enter, I set the stop loss right away. When the first target is reached, I take some profit first, move the stop loss to the entry price, and then the rest is

🟢 Trade Direction: Long
📍 Entry Range: 0.00430 – 0.00437
🛑 Stop Loss: 0.00405
🎯 Take Profit 1: 0.00460
🎯 Take Profit 2: 0.00482
🎯 Take Profit 3: 0.00502

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After years of trading on my own, the biggest thing I fear is chasing the price up. But for a setup like this—after a breakout, the pullback doesn’t break the support—instead, it’s exactly the kind of opportunity I like. Remember last year, there was a similar pattern. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and then it just took off. Since then, I’ve understood that near the key support level is often where the risk-reward ratio is best—provided that you wait for confirmation. Now, looking at this coin’s trend: on the weekly chart, the bottom has already been lifting. On the daily chart, after the breakout there’s been a pullback with reduced volume, which indicates it’s not distribution—it’s a shakeout/clearing. I’ve also been tricked into a fake breakout before, but this time is different. The big stop-loss level below is far away, and the upside space is clear. As long as the level isn’t broken, holding feels reassuring. My usual approach is to first enter a core position, then add when the price returns to the upper edge of the consolidation range. After that, I take profit in batches: at each target, I reduce part of my position. This both locks in gains and helps avoid missing out on the subsequent upswing. 🟢 Trading direction: Long 📍 Entry zone: 0.1700 – 0.1725 🛑 Stop loss: 0.1500 🎯 Take profit 1: 0.1850 🎯 Take profit 2: 0.2020 🎯 Take profit 3: 0.2220 $HEI Click below to trade👇👇👇
After years of trading on my own, the biggest thing I fear is chasing the price up. But for a setup like this—after a breakout, the pullback doesn’t break the support—instead, it’s exactly the kind of opportunity I like. Remember last year, there was a similar pattern. I hesitated and didn’t enter, and then it just took off. Since then, I’ve understood that near the key support level is often where the risk-reward ratio is best—provided that you wait for confirmation.

Now, looking at this coin’s trend: on the weekly chart, the bottom has already been lifting. On the daily chart, after the breakout there’s been a pullback with reduced volume, which indicates it’s not distribution—it’s a shakeout/clearing. I’ve also been tricked into a fake breakout before, but this time is different. The big stop-loss level below is far away, and the upside space is clear. As long as the level isn’t broken, holding feels reassuring. My usual approach is to first enter a core position, then add when the price returns to the upper edge of the consolidation range. After that, I take profit in batches: at each target, I reduce part of my position. This both locks in gains and helps avoid missing out on the subsequent upswing.

🟢 Trading direction: Long
📍 Entry zone: 0.1700 – 0.1725
🛑 Stop loss: 0.1500
🎯 Take profit 1: 0.1850
🎯 Take profit 2: 0.2020
🎯 Take profit 3: 0.2220

$HEI

Click below to trade👇👇👇
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